Ginatio

Exactly. This is probably just another example of Bush administration pork-barrel politics. I'll bet some campaign contributors of his are in the financial sector, and more particularly, in the educational loan business. Creditors have a lot to lose by giving fixed interest rate loans at today's interest rates. There's already a common agreement that the Fed is going to increase rates over the next year, and rates will probably continue to rise. This is just creditors hedging their interests at the expense of the public.

I have a friend that has a cousin that lives in in Georgia and according to him, if you live in Georgia...your college is paid for. That's an idea I think that every college could adopt...if they wanted to. But, the financial institutions that have this country by the balls would lose billions in lost loans...so I don't see free college ever happening.

I have a friend that has a cousin that lives in in Georgia and according to him, if you live in Georgia...your college is paid for. That's an idea I think that every college could adopt...if they wanted to. But, the financial institutions that have this country by the balls would lose billions in lost loans...so I don't see free college ever happening.

are you talking about in-state tuition to state schools? or even private schools there like scad or emory?

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jgruber

I don't think that is quite true. It sounds like rhetoric. For example what does paid for mean? Some schools do not charge tuition for in-state students, but there are hefty fees that come very close to the amount you'd expect for tuition.

And then there's the Tennessee B.S. They started a lottery to provide 3,000.00 scholarships to in-state students, but then they've raised the tuition every year

I have a friend that has a cousin that lives in in Georgia and according to him, if you live in Georgia...your college is paid for. That's an idea I think that every college could adopt...if they wanted to. But, the financial institutions that have this country by the balls would lose billions in lost loans...so I don't see free college ever happening.

I don't think that is quite true. It sounds like rhetoric. For example what does paid for mean? Some schools do not charge tuition for in-state students, but there are hefty fees that come very close to the amount you'd expect for tuition.

And then there's the Tennessee B.S. They started a lottery to provide 3,000.00 scholarships to in-state students, but then they've raised the tuition every year

I have a friend that has a cousin that lives in in Georgia and according to him, if you live in Georgia...your college is paid for. That's an idea I think that every college could adopt...if they wanted to. But, the financial institutions that have this country by the balls would lose billions in lost loans...so I don't see free college ever happening.

According to him, his tuition was paid for. He could go to school full time and only pay fees. The hourly rate was paid for if you were a Georgia resident for at least 1 year or something like that.